Saturday, September 22, 2007

The Houses That Tiger Built

Tiger has three houses, or four if you count his yacht privacy, which could easily be a home for most of us. His main house at present is in Windermere Florida. Here’s the link (pointing down). Tiger also bought a 10 acre Jupiter Island estate for a reported 37,000,000. The property extends from the Intracoastal Waterway to the Atlantic Ocean and includes four houses, the main house, plus two guest houses and a beach house. There’s also two boat docks, tennis and basketball courts but Tiger and Elin think it’s all a bit wishy washy and intend to tear it all down and redevelop the entire property. Check out this pick here (point down). Tigers love for blondes was possible behind his decision to buy an entire floor 3,000 square foot luxury apartment in Stockholm, Sweden. You can see it on google maps here (point down). Finally, not wanting to be too extravagant, he keeps a modest condo in Manhattan beach in Cypress California. Rory Sabbatini has threatened to huff, puff and blow a couple of them down but so far has just managed to break wind.
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Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2008

REDWOOD CITY, Calif. – August 28, 2007 – Electronic Arts (NASDAQ: ERTS) announced today that Tiger Woods PGA TOUR® 08, featuring the breakthrough new EA SPORTS™ GamerNet and Photo Game Face features, is available in retail stores today under the EA SPORTS™ brand. With the critically-acclaimed Tiger Woods PGA TOUR franchise, gamers can put themselves into the middle of the action, test their nerves and skills against the best, and then share and compare their shots with other players from around the world in the most innovative iteration ever created.

With EA SPORTS GamerNet, an interactive gaming hub that hosts user-created gameplay online, every shot on every hole of a player’s game is recorded. From the opening drive to the final putt in the Playoffs for the FedExCup, EA SPORTS GamerNet is capturing all the shots that make, or break players rounds.. With an on-line connection, gamers can then upload their most amazing – and unthinkable – performances on EA SPORTS GamerNet and then earn points and bragging rights by posting video clips for other gamers to play against and by matching challenges set by others.

With Photo Game Face, players will now be able to replicate themselves in the game, down to the finest detail. By simply uploading real-life photographs, players can create in-game characters that look exactly like the real thing with no artistic skill required, giving gamers the unique opportunity to go toe to toe with the best golfers on the finest courses in the world. EA SPORTS GamerNet and Photo Game Face are features exclusive to the Xbox 360™ video game and entertainment system and PLAYSTATION®3 computer entertainment system.
Tiger Woods PGA TOUR® 08 also features the PGA TOUR new Playoffs for the FedExCup, offering gamers the thrill of the playoff chase by playing dream rounds at Westchester Country Club, TPC Boston, Cog Hill and East Lake. In addition to many of the top PGA TOUR players, Tiger Woods PGA TOUR® 08 also features top LPGA golfers, Annika Sorenstam, Natalie Gulbis, Paula Creamer, Cristie Kerr and Morgan Pressel.

Developed in Orlando, Florida by EA Tiburon, Tiger Woods PGA TOUR® 08 is available for the Xbox 360, PlayStation®2 and PLAYSTATION®3 computer entertainment systems, Wii™, Nintendo DS™, PC, Mac, PSP® (PlayStation®Portable) handheld entertainment system and is rated E by the ESRB. The game’s official website is www.easports.com/tigerwoods08
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Friday, September 21, 2007

Tiger Skips Barclays, Causes Mayhem

Tiger Woods has decided to skip the Barclays which is causing a bit of stir in the golfing community. Many folks, including tour head honchu Tim Finchem have expressed disappointment in Tiger not playing saying that he’s not supporting the season ending Fedex Cup. The four tournaments starting with the Barclays are supposed to renew interest in the tour during a usually quiet time. Much hated and once voted “most arrogant tour player” by caddies, Rory Sabbatini, has publicly said he thinks Tiger should play, to which Tiger should have replied “Speak to the hand monkey face”.

Golf forums around the web have also had little gits voicing their opinion with one punter stating “Tiger should play the Barclays, he’s not bigger than the game”. We agree, Tiger isn’t bigger than the game because he IS the game. Tiger has done enough for the Tour and the game and the fedex cup is just like any other events on the tour in that players may choose whether they play or not. So all you Tiger haters, shut up and let the man do what he does best, which is play in a limited amount of tournaments, and play golf like the game has never been played before.
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Tiger 2nd Most Powerful Celebrity

Tiger Woods has been ranked number 2 by Forbes in their 2007 100 Most Powerful Celebrities. Tiger raked in over 100 million US dollars in a year, the first athlete to do so in history according to Forbes. To generate the list, Forbes analyzes celebrity earnings, plus media metrics like Google hits, press mentions as compiled by Lexis/Nexis, TV/radio mentions from Factiva and the number of times an A-lister appears on the cover of 32 major consumer magazines. Earnings estimates are for June 2006 to June 2007 and consist of dollars earned solely from entertainment-related income. Management, agent and attorney fees have not been deducted.

Phil Mickelson is the next golfer on the list coming in at #16 between a David Beckham/David Letterman sandwich. In comparison, Tiger is between an Oprah and Madonna sandwich, which we’re sure has some hidden meaning. But what we really wanna know is what is Tiger going to do with all this power? We’d like to see him use this position to acquire even more money, buy some more houses and open a Blacks only golf club in Harlem. You can check out the entire list art forbes.com


Tiger Woods Forum
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Thursday, September 20, 2007

Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2008 Press Release

CHERTSEY, UK – August 31, 2007 – Electronic Arts (NASDAQ:ERTS) announced today that Tiger Woods PGA TOUR® 08, featuring the breakthrough new EA SPORTS™ GamerNet and Photo Game Face features, is available in retail stores across Europe today under the EA SPORTS™ brand. With the critically-acclaimed Tiger Woods PGA TOUR franchise, gamers can put themselves into the middle of the action, test their nerves and skills against the best, and then share and compare their shots with other players from around the world in the most innovative iteration ever created.

With EA SPORTS GamerNet, an interactive gaming hub that hosts user-created gameplay online, every shot on every hole of a player's game is recorded. From the opening drive to the final putt in the Playoffs for the FedExCup, EA SPORTS GamerNet is capturing all the shots that make, or break players rounds. With an on-line connection, gamers can then upload their most amazing -- and unthinkable -- performances on EA SPORTS GamerNet and then earn points and bragging rights by posting video clips for other gamers to play against and by matching challenges set by others.

With Photo Game Face, players will now be able to replicate themselves in the game, down to the finest detail. By simply uploading real-life photographs, players can create in-game characters that look exactly like the real thing with no artistic skill required, giving gamers the unique opportunity to go toe to toe with the best golfers on the finest courses in the world. EA SPORTS GamerNet and Photo Game Face are features exclusive to the Xbox 360™ video game and entertainment system and PLAYSTATION®3 computer entertainment system.

Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 08 also features the PGA TOUR new Playoffs for the FedExCup, offering gamers the thrill of the playoff chase by playing dream rounds at Westchester Country Club, TPC Boston, Cog Hill and East Lake. In addition to many of the top PGA TOUR players, Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 08 also features top LPGA golfers, Annika Sorenstam, Natalie Gulbis, Paula Creamer, Cristie Kerr and Morgan Pressel.

Developed in Orlando, Florida by EA Tiburon, Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 08 is available for the Xbox 360, PlayStation®2, Wii™, Nintendo DS™, PC and Mac. Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 08 will ship to retailers for the PLAYSTATION®3 computer entertainment systems and the PSP® (PlayStation®Portable) handheld entertainment system in September. The game is rated 3+ by PEGI. The game's official website is www.easports.com/tigerwoods08.

EA SPORTS is the leading interactive sports software brand in the world, with top-selling titles and franchises including Madden NFL Football, FIFA, NHL™ Ice hockey, NBA LIVE basketball, Tiger Woods PGA TOUR® and NASCAR® racing.
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Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Tiger So Good He Doesnt Have To Practice

ATLANTA -- Four victories in his last five starts is proof enough that Tiger Woods is more dominant than ever, especially considering he won those four tournaments by a combined 20 shots and shattered tournament scoring records in consecutive weeks.

More evidence came from his caddie as he waited for Woods to arrive for the final round of the Tour Championship.

"He hasn't hit a practice ball since the British Open," Steve Williams said. "I've been with him nearly 10 years now, and this is the best I've ever seen him hit the ball."

No practice? Not quite.

What he meant was that Woods has such command over his game that he stopped going to the practice range after his rounds since returning home from Carnoustie.

Woods confirmed as much when he left East Lake with his two trophies -- one for the Tour Championship, one for the FedEx Cup.

"Hey, there was no need to go," he said with a shrug and a smile.

Whether this is the best he has ever played is up for debate, but don't expect Woods to participate. He is always looking forward, always trying to figure out a way to get better. That's what makes it so daunting for the guys trying to reach his level. They know they have to get better, and that's assuming Woods doesn't continue to improve himself.

So far, that hasn't happened.

Since his latest round of swing changes took root at the end of 2004, Woods has won 21 times on the PGA Tour. That's more than Phil Mickelson, Vijay Singh and Jim Furyk combined over the last three years.

And the truly scary part is that Woods, at age 31, might still be years away from his prime.

"I don't know when it's going to be," Woods said. "The whole idea is to try and keep improving. When all is said and done, when you rack the cue and go home and retire, you can honestly say, 'These were my best years, when I was at my peak.' But when you're in it, you're always trying to improve that a little bit to get to the next level."

As the trophies keep piling up, the numbers are simply staggering.

Woods now has won 61 times in just more than 11 full years on the PGA Tour. Jack Nicklaus was 36 when he captured his 61st tour victory. He has won 28 percent of the time since turning pro, and that if that number is hard to fathom alone, consider than Mickelson has won 9 percent of his tournaments, Singh is at 8 percent and Ernie Els at 6 percent.

Woods' final putt for par at East Lake put him at 23-under 257 for the lowest 72-hole score of his career, and six shots better than the previous record at the Tour Championship. A week earlier at Cog Hill, he broke the tournament record by five shots at 22-under 262, winning by two over Aaron Baddeley.

With his 2007 season in the books -- all he has left is the Presidents Cup and his Target World Challenge in December -- Woods finished with a 67.79 adjusted scoring average, equaling his record from the 2000 season.
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Sunday, September 16, 2007

Tiger Delivers FedEx Cup

ATLANTA, Ga (AP) -- The FedEx Cup didn't change anything but Tiger Woods' bank account.

The PGA Tour's "new era in golf" came to a familiar conclusion Sunday when Woods captured the Tour Championship in record-setting fashion, closing with a 4-under 66 for an eight-shot victory at East Lake and his seventh title of the season.

The only difference?

This was the first time Woods walked away from one tournament with two trophies.

Along with winning the Tour Championship and its $1.26 million prize, Woods was a runaway winner of the FedEx Cup and the $10 million that goes into his retirement account.

If this was supposed to be the "Super Bowl" of golf, Woods spent most of the final round running out the clock.

He stretched his three-shot lead to four at the turn, and the only drama was whether he would break the 72-hole scoring record on the PGA Tour. He had to settle for a 23-under 257, his career low on tour and breaking the Tour Championship record by six shots.

"I hit it good this week," Woods said. "It's been a phenomenal week"

Masters champion Zach Johnson closed with a 68 and tied for second with Mark Calcavecchia, who shot a 71.

Steve Stricker and Phil Mickelson were the only players with a realistic chance of capturing the FedEx Cup, and their hopes were gone by the weekend. Stricker closed with a 67 and wrapped up second place in the PGA Tour Playoffs, giving him a $3 million retirement boost.

The FedEx Cup was a points race that began in January, with the points reset after the majors for a four-week stretch of the PGA Tour Playoffs. Woods skipped the first playoff event in New York, tied for second outside Boston, then won the last two tournaments to win by an overwhelming margin.

PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem first presented Woods with the crystal trophy from the Tour Championship. Before handing him the FedEx Cup trophy, Finchem alluded to the tour's promotion of the FedEx Cup by noting it had never been kissed.

And it still hasn't.

Woods simply held it aloft as the thousands around 18th green cheered.

"Once you got into the playoffs, you're playing against the best guys and the hottest players. You have to play well," Woods said. "We had some great drama. In the end, it was a lot of fun for all of us."

There was no drama at East Lake, not with Woods hitting on all cylinders to wrap up another phenomenal season. He won seven times in 16 starts on the PGA Tour, and was close to unbeatable the last two months of the season. Woods was 75-under par in his last five tournaments, four of them victories.

Woods' primary objective is winning majors, and he already has 13 of those. The World Golf Championships were created in 1999, and he has won 14 of 25. And now the FedEx Cup.

"It just makes it harder for the rest of us," Johnson said. "Why give him another thing to try to achieve. He's a very driven man. When you add another element to that drive, what are you going to do?"

It was the 61st career victory for Woods, which makes him at 31 the youngest player to reach that mark. Jack Nicklaus was 35 when he captured his 61st tour victory.

And while he has to wait at least until he's 45 to tap into the $10 million from the FedEx Cup, the $1.26 million in cash he earned Sunday pushing his season total to $10,876,052, the second-highest mark in PGA Tour history. Woods came up $29,114 short of the record set by Vijay Singh in 2004, although Singh earned that in 29 tournaments. Woods played in only 16 this year.

Woods' previous low for 72 holes was a 21-under 259 at Firestone in 2000, when he won by 11 shots. This was the eighth time in his career that Woods has won by at least eight shots, and the margin set the record at the Tour Championship.


Woods has never lost any tournament as a pro when leading by more than one shot going into the final round. The only historical hope for anyone Sunday was that Woods twice failed to win with a share of the 54-hole lead, both times at East Lake.

But that hope didn't last long.

Calcavecchia birdied the first hole to get within two shots, and while that was as close as anyone got to him all day, there were a few nervous moments.

Woods took bogey on No. 2 when his short par spun out of the cup, then his wedge to the third flew over the green and into a bed of pine straw. It looked like a sure bogey, which would cut his margin to one, but he hit a beautiful flop shot 8 feet and the putt caught just enough of the lip to drop in for par.

The pivotal shot, if there was one, came on the par-3 sixth hole. The tee was all the way back, a 200-yard carry over the lake, and Woods hit his tee shot to 3 feet for birdie. He slapped hands with caddie Steve Williams walking off the tee, and the rest became a formality with a few peculiar twists.

Johnson, who flirted with a 59 on Saturday to get back in the mix, made three straight birdies and was standing over a 30-foot eagle putt on the ninth that would have pulled him within two shots of the lead. But he was interrupted by the thud of a ball landing on the front of the green, and Johnson's caddie looked back toward the fairway waving his hand.

It was Woods' second shot from the left rough, from 286 yards away. Johnson ran his putt 4 feet by the hole and three-putted for par, and Woods got up-and-down for birdie to stretch his lead to five.

Woods hustled to the green to apologize, and everyone left with smiles.

The only drama remaining was how low Woods could go, a record that likely will never be broken at East Lake given the unusual circumstances. The greens were nearly died a few weeks ago from record heat and a drought, and while the tour staff did an admirable job getting them playable for the Tour Championship, they were soft and slow, and the pins were kept away from the barren spots around the edges of the greens.

It was target practice from the opening shot, reflected it in the record scoring.
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Saturday, September 15, 2007

Tiger Gives Front Nine Wood at Tour Championship

AP
ATLANTA -- A stunning six-hole stretch that Tiger Woods played in 7 under par gave him control of the TOUR Championship on Friday. He followed that with nine holes of mediocrity, which gave everyone else a chance.

Tearing apart a defenseless course at East Lake, Woods made five straight birdies and capped off his amazing run with a 70-foot eagle putt on the par-5 ninth hole to make the turn in 28. But he went five holes before his next birdie, and he had to settle for a 7-under 63 that gave him a three-shot lead over Woody Austin.

Woods was at 13-under 127, his best start to a tournament since he was 15-under through 36 holes at Firestone in 2000, which he went on to win by 11 shots.

At least at East Lake, he has some competition.

Austin had his second straight 65 and will play in the final group with Woods, thankful he wasn't too far behind.

"He's not hard to beat if you're playing as well and you're right there," Austin said. "But if you let him get in front of you, like I said, he's hard to catch."

Not hard to beat?

Remember, it was Austin who suggested he outplayed Woods in the second round of the PGA Championship, the day Woods tied a major championship record with 63 and Austin shot 70.

Austin went on to finish second at Southern Hills, and he'll get a chance to play with the world's No. 1 player on Saturday in presumably sunny conditions. Woods and 19 other players had to return Friday morning to complete the first round, and he wound up play 25 holes and finishing in time to beat the rumble of thunder.

Woods' string of birdies, which included a bunker shot he holed from 60 feet on No. 5, filled East Lake with plenty of electricity. But it might have taken all the drama out of the FedExCup finale.

Woods is atop the playoff standings, a victory would give him the cup and the $10 million prize. Steve Stricker, who needs to win to capture the cup, shot 67 and was nine shots behind. Phil Mickelson, who can only claim the FedExCup if he wins the TOUR Championship and Woods finishes worse than second, was seven shots behind after a 66.

Only a half-dozen players were within five shots of Woods, not a good sign considering Woods hasn't lost a 36-hole lead in three years.

Tim Clark followed his record-tying 62 at East Lake with a 69 and in the group at 9-under 131 that included defending champion Adam Scott (66) and Mark Calcavecchia (66). K.J. Choi, still mathematically alive for the FedExCup, had a 65 and moved to 8-under 132 along with Sergio Garcia (64).

Calcavecchia was atop the leaderboard at 9 under with a birdie on the 11th hole when he started hearing big roars on the other side of the golf course, and the video board kept showing Woods stretching the lead.

And what did he think about the 28 on the front?

"I was trying to figure out which holes he parred, actually," Calcavecchia said. "First three? He got off to a bad start. He could be in a slump. I noticed he made a bogey. I think he's losing it now."

Woods did open with three pars, but his approach into 10 feet for birdie on No. 4 changed everything.

From the front left bunker, 60 feet from a hole he couldn't see, Woods' blasted out and the ball bounced three times before dropping into the cup for eagle. The next three birdies were a product of good shots to soft greens, the ball making a "SPLAT" each time it landed.

And then the hole got in the way again.

He reached the 609-yard ninth hole in two, still 70 feet from the cup, and hammered the eagle putt. When it banged into the back of the cup, all Woods could do was cover his eyes as if to apologize.

"Pure luck," Woods said. "If you could have been right behind the golf ball and see how that thing was bouncing all over the place, it was actually quite funny."

Stricker played a solid front nine and felt outclassed.

"I played pretty good," he said. "I was 2 under and I'm 5 down. You just start thinking, 'Jeepers, what just happened?' He's got a lot of offense, if you know what I mean. You're just waiting for that run of holes, and then he takes off."

Stricker told caddie Tom Mitchell on the 10th tee that they might be witness to a 59, only it never crossed Woods' mind. He didn't even know he had shot a 28 on the front until he signed his card.

"You just play shot for shot," Woods said. "You place the golf ball and you don't worry about anything else. I didn't know I shot 7 under on the front nine. I don't know if it's a zone or not. I just felt that the rhythm was good."

The swing was pretty good, too.

Those thinking about a 59 must have given up when Woods made par on the 10th and 11th, and hit the slope of a bunker on his approach from the rough on No. 12, leading to a bogey. He finished with an 18-foot birdie that gave him a three-shot cushion over Austin.

Woods has never lost a PGA TOUR event when leading by more than one shot going into the final round, although he still has one more round for that streak to be activated. He is 29-6 with a 36-hole lead, last losing from that position at the 2004 Byron Nelson.

The way he was going, the TOUR Championship could have effectively ended before the weekend.

"Luckily for all of us, he kind of slowed down a little bit and kept a tournament of it," Scott said.
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Sunday, September 9, 2007

Tigers Gives BMW Wood

LEMONT, Ill. (AP) — Playing next to Tiger Woods for two days was daunting enough. It was when Steve Stricker watched him from 200 yards away on an elevated tee that he realized how tough it would be to beat him Sunday in the BMW Championship.

He arrived on the par-3 12th tee in time to see Woods, in his customary black pants and red shirt, rap a putt that traveled from one side of the green to the other until the ball disappeared after a 50-foot journey and gave Woods an unlikely birdie.

"It looked like he looked back to make sure that we were watching him make birdie," Stricker said.

Not so, Woods replied.

"I didn't do a Sergio," Woods said with a smile, referring to when Sergio Garcia stared him down at nearby Medinah eight years ago in a fruitless chase at the PGA Championship.

Woods only cared about making birdies, and he got enough of them at Cog Hill to close with an 8-under 63 for a two-shot victory over Aaron Baddeley. Along the way, Woods shattered the tournament scoring record, collected his 60th career victory on the PGA Tour and moved atop the standings in the FedEx Cup with one week remaining.

"If you wanted to win this tournament, you had to make putts," Woods said. "And I just happened to make them today."

The 63 matched Woods' lowest final round to win, and he finished at 22-under 262 to break by five shots the 72-hole record at Cog Hill first set by Scott Hoch in 2001 and matched by Woods two years later.

And while his 60th tour victory surprised him, the amazement wore off when he was reminded that it was only 13 months ago at the Buick Open that everyone made a fuss out of Woods winning No. 50.

Baddeley gave him a good chase until he ran out of birdies on the back nine and settled for a 66. Stricker was tied for the lead until his 3-iron clipped a tree and came up well short on the 12th, leading to a bogey no one could afford. He wound up with a 68 to finish alone in third, enough for him to move up to No. 2 in the FedEx Cup standings.

"There isn't a lot you can do," Stricker said. "I would have had to shoot 63 today to beat him. When you see him ahead of us making the birdies and hearing the roars, you know that he's on a roll and not making many mistakes. It's tough."

It also might be tough to catch him in the FedEx Cup, which concludes next week at the Tour Championship.

Woods goes to East Lake in Atlanta with a 3,133-point lead over Stricker and a 4,120-point margin over Phil Mickelson, who decided not to play this week.

Mickelson, the Deutsche Bank Championship winner Monday, will have to win to have any hopes of capturing the FedEx Cup and the $10 million prize. If Stricker does not win at East Lake, Woods could win the cup by finishing second.

Only two other players - Rory Sabbatini and K.J. Choi - have a mathematical chance.

"Winning takes care of everything," Woods said, whose best is a runner-up at East Lake.

All that mattered at the moment was winning at Cog Hill for the fourth time. It was Woods' sixth victory of the year, and the $1.26 million pushed him over $9 million for the fourth time in his career.

The biggest mystery about the Tour Championship is the course on which they play.

The tour left a two-page notice on players' lockers Sunday morning saying that record heat has severely damaged the greens at East Lake, forcing officials to cancel the pro-am round Wednesday and ban players from so much as setting foot on the greens until the first round on Thursday.

Stewart Cink, Tim Clark and Camilo Villegas all finished in the top 10 and earned enough points to move into the top 30 in the playoff standings and qualify for the Tour Championship.

The 30th spot went to British Open champion Padraig Harrington, who took this week off to recharge and was prepared to play a European tour event if he got bumped out. Luke Donald tried to recover from a 76 in the opening round, but his bogey-free 65 on Sunday left him two shots away from the points he needed to finish 30th.

Also getting knocked out of the top 30 were Jerry Kelly and Aaron Oberholser, who withdrew with hand and wrist injuries and said he would not have been able to play the Tour Championship even if he had made it.

It was the third straight week of compelling golf, a three-man race at sunny Cog Hill that was up for grabs until Wood seized control with his 50-foot birdie on the 12th, and a 20-foot birdie on the 16th that swirled around the cup before falling.

"When he made that putt across the par 3, suddenly you could just see he was into another gear," said Justin Rose, who played with Woods in the final round. "His focus was at a different level."

With his wife, Elin, following along outside the ropes, Woods ran off three straight birdies at the turn to shoot 32, but all that did was help him keep pace with Stricker and Baddeley.

Stricker, the hometown favorite who played at Illinois and grew up across the border in Wisconsin, made four straight birdies through the 10th hole to become the first to reach 19 under, giving him a one-shot lead over Baddeley.

Baddeley caught him on the 11th with a long bunker shot over a crook in the green to 6 feet for birdie.

Woods was in the group ahead and losing steam. He had to work for par on the easy 10th, and he had to settle for par when his chip from right of the green on the par-5 11th ran 15 feet away. His tee shot on the par-3 12th wasn't much better, and Woods hung his head and walked toward the green as it was still in flight.

But on a day of wild cheers, the loudest came on his 50-foot putt that dropped for birdie. He followed that with a 12-foot birdie on the next hole for a lead he never surrendered.

Woods also shot 63 in the final round of the Deutsche Bank Championship last year. And while he is known as the best closer in golf, it was his fourth victory this year when starting the final round from behind.
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Saturday, September 8, 2007

Tiger Close To Gatoring Up for 100 Mill

Associated Press

LEMONT, Ill. -- Along with being a Nike client since turning pro, Tiger Woods has endorsed everything from automobiles to financial services to watches to video games. His next deal likely will be a sports drink.

Woods said Friday he is close to signing an endorsement with Gatorade.

"We're talking about Gatorade right now, and we're working on hopefully finalizing a contract," he said after a second straight 67 in the BMW Championship left him one shot out of the lead.

Golfweek magazine reported on its Web site that Woods has agreed to a five-year deal that could pay him as much as $100 million. The magazine cited sources it did not identify as saying the compensation would be based on an endorsement fee and royalties from the sales of at least three Gatorade products, included a new drink that would be named after Woods.

Woods said he considered another company, but did not say which one. Golfweek reported that Gatorade beat out a bid by Vitamin Water that was said to be worth up to $75 million.

The deal comes about four months after his longtime endorsement with American Express expired amicably, with both sides wanting to go in a different direction. Among the endorsements Woods currently has are Nike, Buick, Tag Heuer, Accenture, Gillette and Electronic Arts, which has a video game that Woods promoted last week in New York.
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Thursday, September 6, 2007

Golf Blogs

Saturday, September 1, 2007

Phil and Tiger Give Each Other Wood

Associated Press.

NORTON, Mass. -- Phil Mickelson played an eight-hole stretch in 7 under par. Right about the time he was cooling off, Tiger Woods played six straight holes in 6 under par.

Filling out the "Big Three" was Vijay Singh, who had his best round in a month and was bringing up the rear.

The glamour group at the Deutsche Bank Championship lived up to expectations Saturday. One day after they combined to go 3 over par in the opening round, they were a combined 19 under in swirling conditions at TPC Boston.

Woods and Mickelson each had a 64. Singh, in danger of missing three straight cuts for the first time in his career, had a 66.

"We all made some putts and got it going," Woods said. "When you get in those groups, when you all feed off one another, when you're all going low, all making birdies, those are fun pairings to get involved in."

Mickelson was the first to get going, chipping in for birdie on the 15th and for eagle on the 18th, sprinkling in birdies at No. 16 and No. 1, then hitting a flop shot over a mound on the par-5 second that spun back to 3 feet for another birdie.

"I was 7 under through eight holes, and that kind of was the round for me," said Mickelson, who was at 8-under 134.

He was six shots ahead of Woods after 11 holes when Woods took off. After a 15-foot birdie on the third, Woods drove the 298-yard fourth green and holed the 35-foot eagle putt, then added birdies on the sixth and seventh holes. He wound up at 6-under 136.

"I just needed to make a few more birdies, and all of a sudden I caught fire on the back nine," Woods said. "I think I went 6 under through six, and that basically got me back into the tournament."

Singh was at 3 over for the tournament until running off four straight birdies around the turn.

"We were more into it today," Singh said. "That was more how we thought we'd play."

It was the first time on the PGA TOUR they played together, courtesy of a PGA TOUR Playoffs system that groups players in the first two rounds according to their standing in the points list. Woods was No. 4, Mickelson No. 5 and Singh No. 6.
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